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Full Discussion: Optimizing JS and CSS
Top Forums Web Development Optimizing JS and CSS Post 303030916 by Akshay Hegde on Tuesday 19th of February 2019 06:59:23 AM
Old 02-19-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
Thanks Akshay,

Honestly, I know how to minimize, combine and deploy Javascript and CSS Smilie

I deploy CSS and JS daily.

What is important is writing code.

No one has complained in the last year (not a single person) that unix.com was "slow to load"... and I live and work 12 time zones away from the server and it loads very fast for me.

So, we all spend time on what is important and if I had nothing better to do, I would minimize more code.

Believe me, I have way too much to do to worry about something that is NOT a problem today and into 2019.

Cheers.
Smilie
This User Gave Thanks to Akshay Hegde For This Post:
 

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CSS::Squish(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  CSS::Squish(3pm)

NAME
CSS::Squish - Compact many CSS files into one big file SYNOPSIS
use CSS::Squish; my $concatenated = CSS::Squish->concatenate(@files); my $squisher = CSS::Squish->new( roots => ['/root1', '/root2'] ); my $concatenated = $squisher->concatenate(@files); DESCRIPTION
This module takes a list of CSS files and concatenates them, making sure to honor any valid @import statements included in the files. The benefit of this is that you get to keep your CSS as individual files, but can serve it to users in one big file, saving the overhead of possibly dozens of HTTP requests. Following the CSS 2.1 spec, @import statements must be the first rules in a CSS file. Media-specific @import statements will be honored by enclosing the included file in an @media rule. This has the side effect of actually improving compatibility in Internet Explorer, which ignores media-specific @import rules but understands @media rules. It is possible that future versions will include methods to compact whitespace and other parts of the CSS itself, but this functionality is not supported at the current time. COMMON METHODS
new( [roots=>[...]] ) A constructor. For backward compatibility with versions prior to 0.06 you can still call everything as a class method, but should remember that roots are shared between all callers in this case. if you're using persistent environment (like mod_perl) then it's very recomended to use objects. concatenate( @files ) Takes a list of files to concatenate and returns the results as one big scalar. concatenate_to( $dest, @files ) Takes a filehandle to print to and a list of files to concatenate. "concatenate" uses this method with an "open"ed scalar. RESOLVING METHODS
The following methods help map URIs to files and find them on the disk. In common situation you control CSS and can adopt it to use imports with relative URIs and most probably only have to set root(s). However, you can subclass these methods to parse css files before submitting, implement advanced mapping of URIs to file system and other things. Mapping works in the following way. When you call concatenate method we get content of file using file_handle method which as well lookup files in roots. If roots are not defined then files are treated as absolute paths or relative to the current directory. Using of absolute paths is not recommended as unhide server dirrectory layout to clients in css comments and as well don't allow to handle @import commands with absolute URIs. When files is found we parse its content for @import commands. On each URI we call resolve_uri method that convert absolute and relative URIs into file paths. Here is example of processing: roots: /www/overlay/, /www/shared/ $squisher->concatenate('/css/main.css'); ->file_handle('/css/main.css'); ->resolve_file('/css/main.css'); <- '/www/shared/css/main.css'; <- handle; content parsing find '@import url(nav.css)' -> resolve_uri('nav.css', '/css/main.css'); <- '/css/nav.css'; ... recursivly process file find '@import url(/css/another.css)' -> resolve_uri('/css/another.css', '/css/main.css'); <- '/css/another.css' ... roots( @dirs ) A getter/setter for paths to search when looking for files. The paths specified here are searched for files. This is useful if your server has multiple document roots or document root doesn't match the current dir. See also 'resolve_file' below. file_handle( $file ) Takes a path to a file, resolves (see resolve_file) it and returns a handle. Returns undef if file couldn't be resolved or it's impossible to open file. You can subclass it to filter content, process it with templating system or generate it on the fly: package My::CSS::Squish; use base qw(CSS::Squish); sub file_handle { my $self = shift; my $file = shift; my $content = $self->my_prepare_content($file); return undef unless defined $content; open my $fh, "<", $content or warn "Couldn't open handle: $!"; return $fh; } Note that the file is not resolved yet and is relative to the root(s), so you have to resolve it yourself or call resolve_file method. resolve_file( $file ) Lookup file in the root(s) and returns first path it found or undef. When roots are not set just checks if file exists. _resolve_file( $file, @roots ) DEPRECATED. This private method is deprecated and do nothing useful except maintaining backwards compatibility. If you were using it then most probably to find files in roots before submitting them into concatenate method. Now, it's not required and this method returns back file path without changes. resolve_uri( $uri_string, $base_file ) Takes an URI and base file path and transforms it into new file path. BUGS AND SHORTCOMINGS
At the current time, comments are not skipped. This means comments happening before @import statements at the top of a file will cause the @import rules to not be parsed. Make sure the @import rules are the very first thing in the file (and only one per line). Processing of @import rules stops as soon as the first line that doesn't match an @import rule is encountered. All other bugs should be reported via <http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=CSS-Squish> or bug-CSS-Squish@rt.cpan.org. AUTHOR
Thomas Sibley <trs@bestpractical.com>, Ruslan Zakirov <ruz@bestpractical.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2006. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.3 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.10.1 2010-01-14 CSS::Squish(3pm)
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